Corinne Silva: “Garden State” Exhibition
Corinne Silva: “Garden State” Exhibitionat Ffotogallery, Penarth. 17/03/2015
Corinne Silva’s GardenState is an exhibition featuring photography and sound installation from her two year exploration in and around both public and private Israeli settlements. Inside Penarth’s Ffotogallery, Silva’s work is displayed across the ground floor and first floor. The ground floor features her body of work entitled “Gardening the Suburbs,” whilst the first floor is her “Wounded” series.
The first room on the ground floor displays a large quote from Winston Churchill on the wall: "war is the normal occupation of man - war and gardening." Interestingly this is the only text present to accompany the entire exhibition - though its message is poignant and relevant. Churchill being an important historic figure with regards to war, the relevance of his message is matched well to Silva’s theme of exploring how gardening has played a role in the expansion of Israeli territory.
Photographs of various garden areas are displayed across the gallery walls on small 1:1 aspect ratio canvases. Arranged in a fragmented style, there initially seems no clear direction to follow around the room. Square photos almost digital look to them - like pixels. The display gives an aesthetic reminiscent of a map or almost of puzzle pieces.
Corinne herself explains that her photographs “loosely [map] these suburban settlement gardens as they extend from the coastal areas surrounding Tel Aviv, across the Green Line and into the Occupied Palestinian Territories.” This accompanying text, found only in pamphlets at the exhibition’s entrance, provides paramount detail about how the photographs are laid out in relation to their origin of creation.
The canvases give a very prominent feel to these otherwise, at first glance, unimportant seeming garden spaces. The placement of the photographs on the wall vary from near the floor to very high up - this could be an indicator of the heights and terrains Silva has crossed to photograph these gardens. Alternatively, she could be complimenting the bright, clear aesthetic of the images by supplying them with plenty of viewing space.
Lighting consists of fluorescent bulbs from the ceiling aimed straight at the walls the photos are displayed on; resembling the circumstantial bright daylight and clear blue skies the photographs were shot within. There is a great significance about Silva’s choice to mount her images on canvas rather than framing them or hanging them as paper prints. Her ideas are based around colonization and the claiming of territory through landscaping and gardening; and she has emulated this - in a subtle and considered way on very much a smaller scale - in her decision to present her photographs as almost physical objects which take up three dimensional space in this small gallery room.
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Up a flight of stairs lies the first floor gallery, where an entire room is immersed in darkness. From the ceiling beams, very large canvases are suspended. All is dark except for small lights angled at 45 degrees, facing down on each photo; hanging in alternating patterns of rows of three. There is no text present in this gallery, so besides the pamphlet giving us the contextual information, viewers are expected to find their own way in interpreting the circumstances of the images.The photographs were taken in the Mount Camel Forest in 2010, following a disastrous forest fire.
The canvases are around 5 or 6 foot tall, and display slender trees in a forest with their bark damaged by fire, revealing a sultry layer of orange flesh underneath it. The colours and tones are richly printed, and the contrast between orange and the dark greens and dark room is strong and prominent. The entire layout simulates a forest, with viewers having to navigate around the images as if they were the trees themselves. The sound aspect of the installation is a recording played on a loop in the room: the sound of footsteps shuffling through the forest gives immerses the viewer into the atmosphere of this environment.
In contrast to the light and airy gallery below it, this one gives off a much more mysterious and gloomy vibe. The atmosphere feels dense and quiet; in spite of the sound installation playing in the background, there is an solitude to it. This solemn feeling accompanies the images well in their context.

















